CHICAGO – Director and auteur M. Night Shyamalan has been very spotty in the last nine years. “The Sixth Sense” filmmaker has had less of an impact with “After Earth” and “The Last Airbender,” but scores again with the super weird, creepy and funny “The Visit.”

Rating: 4.0/5.0

Shyamalan has discovered the “found footage” genre (the movie is filmed by the characters) in a satirical way – two teens chronicle their visit for the first time to their grandparents– and does it his way, with crisp cinematography and flipped out images of dread and humor that both freezes and engages the soul. It’s funny to the point of stupidity – and it survives a tremendously unnecessary epilogue. I think M. Night has found a new niche, and will panic less about his reputation and begin to deliver more on his unrealized potential, based on his earlier works. And, with a tremendous boost right out the box in early September, “The Visit” might eventually be the Halloween Dream of 2015.

Olivia (Rebecca Jamison) and Tyler (Ed Oxenbould) are sister and brother teenagers visiting their grandparents for the first time. Their mother Paula (Kathryn Hahn) had been estranged from her parents since becoming pregnant at 19 years old, and being thrown out of the house. Nana (Deanna Dunagan) and Pop Pop (Peter McRobbie) enthusiastically welcome their grandkids for a week at their isolated Pennsylvania farm.

Strange things begin to occur as the visit commences. Nana has a tendency to roam the house after lights-out at 9:30pm (“Just stay in your room,” the kids are advised). Pop Pop has his own quirks, including a medical condition that becomes threatening. Mother Paula, in the meantime, is on a cruise, enjoying her first vacation in years. What could go wrong?

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CHICAGO – The comic book admiration society has been the fastest growing sub-culture in the last 25 years. Once thought a remnant of childhood is now a flourishing industry in show business, comic book shops and conventions. “Geek Lounge,” a TV series created by producer/director/writer Larry Ziegelman, explores the comic book/pop culture generation, and is now streaming on Amazon Prime. Click here for the details.

CHICAGO – They’ve got the world on a string – and other forms of bringing inanimate objects to life – at the Chicago International Puppet Theater Festival, which is currently presenting shows all around the city through January 27th, 2019. For more information and to purchase tickets, click here.